Friday, December 25, 2015

The Christmas Truce Of 1914

Today is the anniversary of the Christmas Truce of 1914, a spontaneous soldiers’ truce that broke out on Christmas Eve all along the Western Front in France, lasting in places until the day after Christmas.

French, British and German soldiers, intrigued by the sound of Christmas carols from the enemy trenches, first tentatively refrained from firing on one another. A German boot tossed into the British trenches turned out to be filled with candy and sausage. Soldiers, with increasing confidence, began to venture out into no-man’s land and into each other’s trenches to exchange small presents like coffee and cigarettes, spirits, and newspapers from home. They celebrated Christmas by playing football on no-man’s-land. Soldiers from opposing armies shared rations, sang carols together and posed for group photographs.

You can read the rest @
http://original.antiwar.com/kevin-carson/2015/12/24/remembering-the-christmas-truce-of-1914/

That was probably the last time Christian values triumphed over mankind's lust for war.

There is no just war, unless the armies literally are commanded by Jesus Christ Himself. And that will not happen until the final trumpet blows.

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